The Rise of For-Profit Higher Education: A General Equilibrium Analysis

Other authors

Universitat Ramon Llull. Esade

Publication date

2025-08-07



Abstract

For-profit colleges have increased their share of the 4-year college market, particularly among nontraditional and online students, raising concerns about post-graduation outcomes. We set up and calibrate a general equilibrium model of college choice to analyze how for-profits compete with public and private nonprofit institutions. We quantify their response to changes in Pell Grant caps, public university subsidies, and gainful employment legislation linking federal funding to graduates' debt-to-earnings ratios. Lowering public sector subsidies increases the market share of for-profit colleges. For-profit institutions prefer to comply with gainful employment standards but do so by lowering tuition and instructional quality.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Published version

Language

English

Pages

22 p.

Publisher

Wiley Periodicals LLC

Published in

The RAND Journal of Economics, Vol. 56, Issue 3

Recommended citation

This citation was generated automatically.

Rights

© L'autor/a

© L'autor/a

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Esade [289]